What are the oldest wines you've drunk?

A taste of an 1815 Moscatel de Setubal courtesy of David Wainwright at a WIMPS in 2009/10ish.

Actually drunk:
A pair of red Bordeaux from a Scottish cellar I sold when I was running Bid for Wine - both were understood to be from 1870 based on cellar records and other evidence. One was fabulous (I opened it with Mark Savage MW who reckoned it was probably a Margaux) and the other interesting - tasted as though it had been aged in pine barrels.

A tasting through the family reserves at Hidalgo last year - some of the soleras pre-date the Bodega and are probably 18th century according to Javier.

Port: 1931 Quinta do Noval

Burgundy: a 1945 (Beaune as I recall).
Sparkling: Pol Roger 1962
 
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Oldest fortified - a 1932 Marsala, on the enomatics at Hedonism last year
Oldest red - 1959 Chateau Margaux (the acme of 'bricked', but so fresh and delicious), drunk at a Margaux vertical tasting hosted by Corinne Mentzelopoulos in about 2000
Oldest white - 1976 Richard Richter Spatlese Auction, provided by Mike H at his Riesling dinner
Oldest sparkling - 1978 Moet, provided by Chris H at his charity dinner
 
Raked from Cellartracker, although there are a few other oldies not recorded here; a 1962 Penfolds "Sauternes", and lots of dead Oz stuff from the late 50s/early 60s in a cellar I helped clean up about fifteen years ago. 50-odd bottles of acetone opened that day, including some 62 & 63 Grange.

  • 1897 Seppeltsfield Para 100 Vintage Tawny - Australia, South Australia, Barossa, Barossa Valley (25/08/2000)
    NobleRottersSydney - South Aust trip (2) Barossa (Henschke/Penfolds/Seppelt/Magill)
    : Brown/green colour. Intense burnt caramel & tea nose. Thick viscous (barely) liquid sticks to the glass. Unbelievably intense on palate. Rancio, toffee flavours explode on the tongue. (alcohol is 20-25%). Absolutely remarkable. Flavour stays in mouth for minutes afterwards. Sensational!
  • 1900 Henriques & Henriques Madeira Malmsey Century Solera - Portugal, Madeira (7/02/2005)
    NobleRottersSydney - Lots of birthdays this year (Lucio's, Paddington)
    : The real thing! Three Dulux shades darker than the [1955] d’Yquem, but of a very similar colour spectrum. Burnt caramel, cold tea and marmalade aromas precede a rich, warm, alcoholic palate. The wine blooms in the mouth with pungent flavours of leather and hints of tangy orange rind. Long and persistent. In many ways not hugely dissimilar to the d’Yquem, but the higher alcohol levels seems to keep the wine from tasting stale in any way.
  • 1952 Niepoort Porto Vintage - Portugal, Douro, Porto (3/06/2013)
    NobleRottersSydney - Random night (Verde, East Sydney)
    : {Gordon} Double-decanted 24 hours prior. Tawny colour. Really hard to describe beyond that. . Aged and caramel-like. The palate is warm and comforting, but doesn’t seem hot or alcoholic; just rich with brandy and caramelized flavours. Terrific palate weight and balance, culminates in a full-bodied, long, medium-dry finish. A privilege to taste.
  • 1955 Château de la Guimonière Coteaux du Layon Chaume - France, Loire Valley, Anjou-Saumur, Coteaux du Layon Chaume (3/03/2008)
    NobleRottersSydney - Penfolds &/or 1988 (Alio's, Surry Hills)
    : It’s a big ask to expect a relatively modest Loire chenin to hold together over fifty years. And it receives a hedged reply. A clear gold/amber colour. The nose is now becoming quite oxidative, but there’s still a remnant of honeyed, syrupy fruit. The palate manages a dash of quince-like flavours as well, not exactly fresh, but not in terminal decay either. The finish combines a little warmth and bitterness, which marries well enough with the medium-sweetness of the wine generally. A pleasant and attractive wine, which has seen its best days, but remains an interesting curio.
  • 1955 Château d'Yquem - France, Bordeaux, Sauternais, Sauternes (7/02/2005)
    NobleRottersSydney - Lots of birthdays this year (Lucio's, Paddington)
    : In addition to the sheer novelty of drinking 50-year-old Yquem, this particular bottle was signed (with salutation) by Comte Alexandre de Lur Saluces himself on 19/3/95. It also bore an American importers label, which hinted disturbingly at a complex cellaring history. Meanwhile, the wine was caramel-brown in colour. Aromas of caramel, butterscotch, burnt toffee compete with a strongly oxidized note. The palate is rich and semi-sweet, but overlaid with a distinctly brassy character, displaying a touch of volatility as well. A bit liqueur-like in many ways. Most of the flavour settles on the front and middle palate; the finish is quite persistent but lacks freshness. Considering other notes on this wine and vintage (but without much experience of my own) it has to go down as a disappointment. Just a bit oxidized and, well, old. Has come to be more Madiera than Sauternes.
  • 1955 Moulin Touchais Anjou Blanc - France, Loire Valley, Anjou-Saumur, Anjou (4/09/2006)
    NobleRottersSydney - First Growth Night (Guillaume at Bennelong)
    : Honey & nougat nose, overlaid with a nutty maderization. Wood spice & cinnamon notes. Palate follows the nose to a degree, weighty, with almost an amontillado aspect to it. The aging has bequeathed some pungent notes and the wood-like flavours, all of which is interesting; but the single biggest effect of the oxidative effects has been to truncate the finish somewhat, which is a pity. Otherwise well preserved by the acidity, which is still ragingly high, this is a privilege to drink, although its time has definitely arrived, and there’s nothing to be gained by holding it longer.
  • 1962 Château Lafaurie-Peyraguey - France, Bordeaux, Sauternais, Sauternes (6/08/2001)
    NobleRottersSydney - Classed Growth night (Darling Mills, Glebe)
    : This was my bargain auction buy earlier in the year (A$60) and I was anxious to see how it was. A deep gold colour, it exhibited a wonderful nose of caramel, butterscotch, honey, golden syrup and a hint of creme-brulee. Some oxidation and maybe even some VA evident on the palate, but the wine was not at all dried out, and exhibited plenty of sweetness still. Rich, with great length, I wish I had more bottles of it! An absolute pleasure to drink, and quite unlike anything else!
  • 1963 Seppelt Cabernet Sauvignon - Australia, South Australia, Mount Lofty Ranges, Clare Valley (4/12/2005)
    NobleRottersSydney - Christmas Lunch 2005 (Andrew's place)
    : Here’s a rarity – and a pair of bottles, no less. Another options wine, not picked as 40 years old by anyone. Very dark, with a fading burnt orange rim. The nose resembles a fortified, port-style wine. Burnt toffee, caramel notes predominate. The palate is relatively thin; the tannins have mostly departed, but it’s a wine still very much alive. Like a light port, but without the sweetness or alcoholic weight. I don’t find the volatility overly dominating. A curio, yes, but still a very unusual wine. I wonder who now owns the vineyard that supplied this fruit? Cabernet was pretty thin on the ground in Australia in 1963. Can’t see that this wine has ever sold at Langton’s either, which would make it very rare indeed…
  • 1963 Sandeman Porto Vintage - Portugal, Douro, Porto (7/10/2003)
    WLDG Offline - Robin Garr (Newtown, Sydney)
    : Much lighter and less forward than Dow’s, this has choco-strawberry aromas, and warm alcoholic palate which lacks the sophistication of the other wine. Attractive in a lighter vein, it’s not falling over yet by any means, as opposed to some of the guests at the dinner , no, no, I’m just joking.
  • 1963 Dow Porto Vintage - Portugal, Douro, Porto (7/10/2003)
    WLDG Offline - Robin Garr (Newtown, Sydney)
    : Lifted alcoholic nose with liquorice and chocolate notes follow through on the palate with a pleasing warmth and long rich finish. What a young, attractive wine!
  • 1964 Château Canon - France, Bordeaux, Libournais, St. Émilion Grand Cru (7/06/2004)
    NobleRottersSydney - NOT Oz/NZ/France/Italy (Lucio's, Paddington)
    : Off the theme, but to celebrate a birthday year (mine!). Pale brick red. Very dry smelling nose, dried leaves & tobacco. All secondary characters. No tannins to speak of. The palate is light and soft, and gradually picks up some lingering sweetness over time. Wine still alive, but definitely drink up!
  • 1964 Wynns Coonawarra Estate Cabernet Sauvignon - Australia, South Australia, Limestone Coast, Coonawarra (26/09/2004)
    This one glowed with a burnished amber colour, and showed quite some bottle stink. Ultimately, some ripe if faintly herbaceous cabernet fruit showed through. Structurally somewhat tighter than the Penfolds [1964 Bin 389], although
    no tannins were evident here either. Volatility starting to come up, but not intrusively so.
  • 1964 Penfolds Bin 389 - Australia, South Australia (26/09/2004)
    Pale brick-red with orange tints. A bit of VA and varnish on the nose, the palate is a bit thin with gently decayed fruits, no tannin, finish fading away quickly. Certainly drinkable (level was vhs), not quite compelling, but past it's best. Fun.
  • 1966 McWilliam's Mount Pleasant Wines Shiraz Philip - Australia, New South Wales, Hunter Valley (10/06/2002)
    Why do people keep Philip? It’s just not a cellaring wine, and yet here it is lying around covered in dust everywhere I go. This was fairly rank, with a nose of earth & volatility, but those with less exposure to old wines were game to taste. Experience teaches that the ‘bouquet’ is the best thing about wines like this, and there were plenty of screwed up noses afterwards! One stage beyond dead, whatever that is.
  • 1967 Château d'Yquem - France, Bordeaux, Sauternais, Sauternes (2/07/2007)
    NobleRottersSydney - Wines beginning with 'Y' (Alio's, Surry Hills)
    : [cork, A$18] Yup. Eighteen bucks. That’s what this Yquem cost in the early 70s, when first purchased. Forty years old, one owner, never raced. Level just into the neck. Dark amber verging on brown, worringly. There is some spirity old toffee-fruit richness, but the aromas are distinctly maderised. The palate offers a sort of decayed richness; cumquats, ginger, and a generally caramelized aura are the chief hallmarks. This was opened some hours prior to consumption – would it have been better to wait? Medium bodied, with decent length, it’s both exciting and frustrating to taste. Mostly because in this semi-decayed state, there’s still enough skeletal richness to hint at how great this must have been at its peak. The balance along the palate is still impeccable, yet much of the richness has since departed, a crumbly cork perhaps hinting at the oxidative nature of the problem. Still, a privilege to taste – and in significantly better condition than the ’55 tasted at the beginning of 2005. Medium length finish which manages to be sort-of dry and sweet at the same time. In all honesty, a disappointment given the reputation of the vintage. Them's the breaks...
  • 1967 McWilliam's Mount Pleasant Wines Sauternes - Australia, New South Wales, Hunter Valley (8/09/2009)
    NobleRottersSydney - 'Bet you've never tasted this - Oz only' (Alio's, Surry Hills)
    : {Gordon} Made from Semillon and ‘white Hermitage’ grapes the label says; a little research indicates the latter probably means Trebbiano, of all things. The nose offers faintly ancient caramel aromas, thick with the mustiness of old age. The remains of sweet fruits litter the palate; a whiff of nougat peeks through the mustiness. The wine hasn’t actually disintegrated (surviving its stumpy nubbin of a cork), but it’s just faded away, like a painting exposed to too much sun. The wine finishes almost dry by now, in a maderized kind of way. Just too old, I’m afraid.
  • 1968 Monimpex Tokaji Aszú Essencia - Hungary, Tokaji (7/06/2004)
    NobleRottersSydney - NOT Oz/NZ/France/Italy (Lucio's, Paddington)
    : A dark brown, which in colour and viscosity resembled motor oil. The nose was quite coarse, resembling a mixture of cold tea and rotting vegetables. On the palate there is significant oxidization – it’s not dissimilar to an amontillado sherry is some ways – although signs of richness remain the wine has pretty well dried out. A longish finish, but really a shadow of what it may have been.
  • 1968 Brown Brothers Cabernet Sauvignon Milawa Vineyard - Australia, Victoria (15/10/2001)
    NobleRottersSydney - 1990 & prior (Darling Mills, Glebe)
    : Served blind. Amber/onion brown. Developed nose, soft and unfocussed. A hint of mint, perhaps. Very gentle on the palate - slightly oxidised and faded, but not too much VA. Surprisingly good for its age, and still very drinkable. The product of a second flowering following a severe frost in November 67 (ah, remember it well...) and sold in a special mixed-dozen pack at the cellar door in 1980.
  • 1968 Penfolds Shiraz Bin 747 Claret - Australia, South Australia (7/12/2014)
    NobleRottersSydney - Christmas Lunch 2014 (Greg's place)
    : {cork} Here’s a curio. The inaugural vintage of a short-lived, occasional cuvee; a legacy of the same ex-Qantas marketing manager who gave Penfolds the still extant Bin 707. All shiraz, from the Barossa and Clare valleys. Level is mid-shoulder. Saturated cork. Decanted into a closed vessel for about 2 hours prior to sampling. Alarmingly murky brown. Aged leathery nose; a hint only of volatility probably because it doesn’t quite seem to have the energy to be powerfully acetic. The palate is the best part of all; soft and leathery, yes, but like furniture polish; still alive and not too bacterial. Dry, lovely even presence on the palate. Barely medium-bodied at nearly 50 years old, but really surprisingly good. More surprising than enthralling, but a privilege to taste anyway; thanks Geoffrey.
  • 1969 Penfolds Grange - Australia, South Australia (6/02/2017)
    NobleRottersSydney - Penfolds prior to 2007 (360 Bar & Dining, Sydney)
    : {cork} (Geoffrey) Double-decanted 3 hrs earlier. Very dark, with all brick tinges; more brown than red really. Leathery, earthy nose. Not too bacterial though. The palate has lost most of its tannin, offering varnished highlights of ancient red fruits. Acid has the dominant hand here now; the wine is medium-bodied, with leathery old flavours. Finish remains impressively medium/long though, despite it seeming just a bit simple for the reputation of Grange. Still, for 48 years, and from an ‘average’ vintage, heavy criticism is a bit churlish; this is a pretty spectacular effort, all things considered.
  • 1970 Lindeman's Hunter River Burgundy Bin 4110 - Australia, New South Wales, Hunter Valley (7/10/2003)
    WLDG Offline - Robin Garr (Newtown, Sydney)
    : Glowing light brick-red. Soft leathery nose. Classic Hunter, but in a good way…! Earthy characters are not over the top, although I don’t find much overt fruit character remaining. Satin-smooth on the palate, it’s very even across the tongue, warm and gentle, with a finish of medium length. Not in any obvious danger of falling over, either, even after some time in the glass.
  • 1970 Château Mouton Rothschild - France, Bordeaux, Médoc, Pauillac (6/11/2000)
    NobleRottersSydney - Bordeaux night (Darling Mills, Glebe)
    : Bricklike colour, heading towards orange, with a suggestion of cloudiness? A nose of meaty beefiness, with liquorice and leather overtones. A soft, leathery old-wine palate, and an enchanting blend of still present acid, some soft tannins and mature old small-berry fruits, barely detectable. It seems unfair to try to pick out the components, as they blend to a beautifully smooth finish. The wine seems to somehow grow sweeter, just sitting in the glass, smelling different each time I go back to it. And although I’m no expert, surely it has nowhere further to go. Equally, it’s not just clinging on either, it’ll hold for a few years yet, I expect.
  • 1970 Château Batailley - France, Bordeaux, Médoc, Pauillac (6/07/2015)
    NobleRottersSydney - Cellar Treasures (360 Bar & Dining, Sydney)
    : {cork} (Gordon) Barely ullaged. Double-decanted two hours earlier. Looks great; garnet with some bricking. The nose is ancient; cigar-boxes with a musty carpet note. Camphor almost! The palate presents an initially lovely and antique flavour spectrum of leaf-tinged black fruit, soft and gentle, with only the barest of tannins remaining, quite an even light/medium-bodied presence along the tongue, but a rather short dry finish. In many ways it’s quite lovely, but it lacks the ultimate complexity and ‘wow’ factor. On the other hand, what do you expect from a 35-yo 5th-growth? Lovely to find it showing so well. Drink up!
  • 1971 Penfolds Grange - Australia, South Australia (5/03/2018)
    NobleRottersSydney - Two Hands + specials (360 Bar & Dining, Sydney)
    : {cork, 12.3% [Gordon] Re-corked at the 2014 clinics, topped up despite level still in the neck. Tonight, decanted immediately prior to service, although sediment was minimal. Still a wonderfully dark garnet, with just the faintest bricking around the rim. Mature aromas of staggering beauty: leather and spice, chocolate and vanilla, laced with violets, aged plum and raspberry fruit. There’s just a hint of the trademark volatility that made this such a controversial show wine back in the day. The palate is mirror smooth, not really more than medium-bodied, but all of-a-piece. Ethereal flavours dance, kaleidoscope-like, on the tongue; everything that you sniffed is there, and the rest that can’t really be pinned down. A shopping list of flavours seems a bit pointless with a wine like this; it’s so much more than the sum of its parts. It’s well-aged, but it still has freshness and vibrancy. There’s even the presence of gentle low-level graphite tannins. Doesn’t seem especially oaky either. Immaculate balance on the tongue, and has an endless finish that make this a matchless wine. Considering this is approaching fifty years old, it’s extraordinary. It’s not fragile initially, although I wouldn’t decant it long, and it’s hard to see any improvement left, only the risk of decline. But anything non-ullaged, or ‘clinic-ed’ should hold a while yet. One of the great wines of the twentieth century by anyone’s standards and an absolute privilege to drink.
 
Anthony Barton was very polite about it. If it wasn't genuine, I suspect he would have been to gentlemanly to say so.
Whatever the outcome, I didn't hold the wine in high regard. On the evening the 2005 was superb. It remains one of the three finest young red wines I have tasted.

I think I enjoyed the 1863, or whatever it was, more than you. Worth noting that Linden was/is always super cautious about provenance.

1863 - the year of the formation of the FA, start of the London Underground and Custer's Last Stand.

The '05 was fabulous as were many at that time shown as the youngest in the tasting.

But I also recall the '03 showing well that night, the first time I got an inside track from AB himself that the '01 was a really good wine and the '49 and '34 were outstanding too. A good night!
 
Solera: Malaga 1885.
Port: 1887
Other Fortifed: 35 Massandra Collection Muscat
Chenin: 1911 Bredif Vouvray
Bdx: Half bottle of 1907 ( but it might have been 11 as well) Haut Brion
White Burg: 1955 Meursault ( drunk in 2015). simple negotiant bottle. Held up well.
Germany: Various, mostly dead, Auslessen from 1959 that I picked up from an auction once
Rioja: 1959 Grans Reserva. That would have been in 2000. Cant remember the house
Romainia: 64 Murfatlar Pinot Gris
White Bdx: 64 Laville (drunk in 2016)
Red Burg: Probably some 69 Volnay at a friends house around 2009
Auz: 71 Grange
 
Taken from memory, so there may be some I've forgotten. Many thanks to those so generous to share with me (and in a few cases, to me for having had the foresight to stock the wines). It helps to have lived a long time -- did I ever tell you what 1870 Lafite tasted like from cask?

Pfalz and the oldest wine I've ever tasted by a good margin: 1811 Forster Ungeheuer Riesling (Auslese I believe, although not so marked on the handwritten label). Maybe it was better 50 or 100 years ago, but still more than vital and of interest and enjoyment. The oldest among a fabulous selection of 19th and 20th century wines presented by Bassermann-Jordan in August 2018.

White Burgundy: 1846 Meursault-Charmes from Bouchard P&F, drunk in 2006 (275th anniversary dinner). Still vital and of interest and enjoyment. Clearly had been botrytised, as was the case with the excellent 1939 Montrachet that preceded it.

Red Burgundy: 1865 Beaune-Grèves Vigne de l'Enfant Jésus. Same 2006 dinner -- quite alive and impressive (person next to me had a pour from a different bottle and it was barely alive).

Claret: Oldest I can recall is 1916 Château Margaux drunk at a dinner ca. 2000. Doing well.

White Bordeaux: 1941 Domaine de Chevalier drunk at the estate in 2001 -- magnificent, was was the 1951.

Sauternes: 1937 Climens, but it was not as memorable as 1945 Rieussec from 375 ml. Both from the mid-/late 1990s. I think I may have had something from the 1920s, but I can't recall it now.

Northern Rhône red: 1959 Hermitage and Côte-Rôtie under the Jaboulet-Isnard label. These were identical to La Chapelle and Les Jumelles under the Jaboulet label, as I've verified with Jaboulet. These were drunk in the mid-1990s, which means that remaining bottles of 1983 Jaboulet La Chapelle and Verset Cornas and 1985 Chave Hermitage and Verset Cornas plus some still later Northern Rhône's in my cellar will be older when I get around to drinking them.

Northern Rhône white: 1952 Chave Hermitage, opened by Jean-Louis Chave in late 1990s or early 2000s. Straight from opened bottle, wasn't memorable. I'm sure Jean-Louis took it upstairs and decanted for service that evening and that it was much better. I still have multiple bottles of 1989 and 1990 Chave white Hermitage at home.

Loire white: 1949 Huët Vouvray Moëllux (don't recall which lieu-dit) in late 1999. Splendid, but served at a restaurant by a big-name but idiotic sommelier who ignored my advice to serve it ahead of the 1975 Yquem and instead served them side-by-side.

Loire sparkling: a red Anjou 1928 half bottle from Maison Prunier drunk in late 1990s or early 2000s. Rosé in color but still quite interesting to drink.

Loire red: I still have 1989 Chinon Clos de la Dioterie from Joguet in the cellar -- at 31+ years when I drink it, it will be the oldest Loire red for me.

Bandol: 1971 Tempier drunk at the estate in 1991 is the earliest vintage, but the oldest, when I get around to finishing them off, will be various bottlings of 1988 in my cellar and I've drunk many vintages from the 1980s and 1990s that were older at time of drinking than the 1971.

Southern Rhône: I'm not a big fan of Grenache and high alcohol wines. I do recall a quite decent 1957 Châteauneuf-du-Pape from the late 1980s or early 1990s, and a very old Domaine des Pallières Gigondas drunk in the early 2000s that was dead.

California: A 1918 sweet wine from Cucamonga (Southern California) that was drunk in the 1980s. This was part of a stash that was found in a closet and may have been from a home winemaker as there was no label other than 1918 on the bottle. Otherwise, a fabulous 1946 Pinot Noir from Beaulieu Vineyards drunk in 1996 is the oldest I can recall.

Alsace: 1985 Zind-Humbrecht Pinot Gris Rangen de Thann from my cellar last year -- fabulous bottle (the 1985 Riesling from Rangen de Thann wasn't so hot). Still one bottle remaining.

Champagne -- 1949 Krug. This was drunk ca. 1998 and was delicious, but it is the only bottle on this list for which I have provenance concerns. It was supplied by a world-class collector who lives in the Bay Area, but whom I know to have bought from a number of fake sources (e.g., Royal Wines, which was one of Rodenstock's US outlets, Kurniawan, etc.) He cannot possibly know for all the wines in his cellar which are real and which are fake (and indeed, I'm told that he denies that he's ever bought a fake bottle -- unsurprising since he sells quite a bit of wine these days).

Chianti -- 1956 Chianti Classico Riserva Ducale (gold label) drunk ca. 1996. Very, very good -- and with few exceptions, I'm not a Chianti fan.

Barolo/Barbaresco -- Probably 1985 Barolo Cannubi Boschis from Sandrone drunk from a friend's cellar last year.

Mosel-Saar-Ruwer -- I've had various 1921 TBAs, including the legendary Thanisch Berncasteler Doctor (which on that occasion did not live up to its reputation).
 
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Ignoring the fake 1863 Barton mentioned above the below is culled from my crappy TN spreadsheet for wines pre 1950. Won't bore you with the TNs themselves. Many were thanks to Linden - among which the 1900 Margaux (courtesy of David Elswood) and the 1928 Gruaud Larose remain fresh in the memory as astonishing.

1870 Gruaud Larose

1900 Margaux

1918 Climens

1920 Climens

1920 Pontet Canet

1921 Suduiraut

1922 Climens

1924 Climens

1924 Clos Fourtet

1924 Leoville Las Cases

1926 Latour

1928 Calon Segur

1928 Clos Fourtet

1928 Cos d'Estournel

1928 Evangile

1928 Gruaud Larose

1928 Haut Brion

1928 Latour

1928 Leoville Las Cases

1928 Pontet Canet

1929 Ausone

1929 Beychevelle

1929 Clos Fourtet

1934 Branaire Ducru

1934 Cheval Blanc

1934 Climens

1934 Ducru Beaucaillou

1934 Ducru Beaucaillou

1934 La Garde

1934 Lafite Rothschild

1934 Latour

1934 Leoville Barton

1934 Leoville Barton

1934 Leoville Las Cases

1934 Margaux

1934 Margaux

1934 Montrose

1934 Petit Village

1936 Climens

1937 Calon Segur

1937 Climens

1937 Pontet Canet

1937 Yquem

1940 Leoville Las Cases

1942 Ausone

1942 Climens

1942 Climens

1943 La Mission Haut Brion

1943 Margaux

1945 Beychevelle

1945 Cos d'Estournel

1945 Ducru Beaucaillou

1945 Gruaud Larose

1945 La Mission Haut Brion

1945 Latour

1945 Leoville Las Cases

1945 Leoville Las Cases

1945 Lynch Bages

1945 Rieussec

1946 Huet

1947 Calon Segur

1947 Climens

1947 Figeac

1947 Pape-Clement

1947 Rieussec

1947 Rieussec

1948 Climens

1949 Angelus

1949 Climens

1949 Cos d'Estournel

1949 Ducru Beaucaillou

1949 JJ Prum

1949 JJ Prum

1949 Leoville Barton

1949 Pontet Canet
 
1914 Moët and Chandon drunk on its centenary.
Introduced as harvested under gunfire by the children of the region (they presented a smaller target to sniper fire) certainly made one think about the taste you were about to have.
 
A couple of years ago a 1921 TbA from the estate FK Schmitt in Rheinhessen together with Jancis Robinson at the estate Keller. Fair to say it is not easy to impress me with old wines, but this Riesling was really divine. Jancis was thrilled too and all drinkers on the table.

1921 Nierstein KEHR & FLÄSCHENHAHL Trockenbeerenauslese
 
Forgot, I also have some 1949 Ferrari Solaria Jonica, a single bottle of which I've opened. An odd wine - closest similar wine I've had is a 1968 Rivesaltes. Certainly doesn't taste 71 years old, though.
 
I think the oldest wine I've drunk is a Port from IIRC, 1917, provided blind by David Wainwright. I think at the Ledbury? I want to say Warre's but I can't be sure.

1917 Moscatel de Setubal, producer unknown (to me) - at an Xmas WIMPS about 10 years ago and thanks to David Wainwright. It was superb!

A taste of an 1815 Moscatel de Setubal courtesy of David Wainwright at a WIMPS in 2009/10ish.

I reckon there are two wines that are getting confused here - I don't remember having a Moscatel that old, and the date 1917 definitely sticks out in my mind. I am sure the wine I am thinking of was at the Ledbury and I'm confident it was Port, because I remember being very chuffed with my "pre 1920s Port" guess on what it was!

On another note, remembered another wine - 1958 Haut Brion. Drunk with Brady, Ben H, DDJ and I think Mr. Prain? At the Ledbury. It was without label - a friend who owns a regional auction house had it come into a sale, and the lack of label deemed it unsaleable(!). We went for a beer a few weeks before and he literally threw the bottle at me whilst exclaiming "thought this might be up your street". He had no idea it was a HB, but the bottle shape was obvious and the capsule was the right colour etc. Level was into neck. I knew it was post 1955 as that's when the shape changed, but the glass was clearly old. 1 year off a 1959! It was however really rather good, exceptional persistence and just the picture of mature high quality Graves.

I think he was making up for the very dud 1961 DP that I got through his auction a year or two before.
 
1893 Chateau Margaux
1947 Chateau Cheval Blanc
1921 Chateau d'Yquem
1942 La Tache
1967 Montrachet Leroy
1927 Taylor's Port
1920 Dhronhofberger feine Beerenauslese
1958 Barolo Pio Cesare
1961 Roederer
1975 Monadvi Cabernet Sauvignon Reserve

all since 2006. Margaux, d'Yquem, La Tache & Taylor's perfect . Cheval Blanc very good but not my kind of wine. Roederer no bubbles left and simply too old for my taste. Montrachet ok but should have better been sold looking at the price then. The Dhronhofberger interesting but having lost it's sweetness, the Barolo very old, most probably badly stored and the Mondavi surprisingly fresh and holding & drinking well, wouldn't have called the bottle California.

Cheers

Rainer
 
1904 Seppetsfield Para 100 Year Old Vintage Tawny tasted on release in 2004.
1929 Chateau Yquem tasted at a birthday celebration in 2000 (there were 36 vintages of Yquem with examples from each decade)
1955 Marc Bredif Vouvray tasted in 2013 (I think that I had a 1949 some time in the 90's but do not have a record of it)
 
For me its1934 Leoville Barton, thanks to Linden at David Popes off line in 2008. A few of you may have been there too?
I found my notes, “mellow colour, slight spirit nose, mature fruit going to orange peel. Subtle undergrowth. Very good 17/20.”
 
1893 Deinhard Rüdesheimer Rottland Cabinet Rheingau
1911 Schloss Reinhartshausen Hattenheimer Stabel Cabinet Rheingau
(both at a Linden Wilkie tastingL the 1893 was impressive; the 1911 was dead)
1912 Taylor's (at Linden's port excavation chez Bailey in Edinburgh)
1914 Barbeito Madeira Boal (no idea where I had this)
 
Oldest drunk
Fortified: 1927 Dows Port
Red: 1954 Vallana Spanna Campi Raudii
White: 1969 Geisweiler et Fils Meursault
Sweet: Oldest recorded in CT is 1975 Niederthäler Hof Wallhauser Pfarrgarten Silvaner Eiswein, but I've certainly drunk 1971 Rieslings
Sparkling: Again not in CT, but recall it was an old SOSS (Seppelts original sparkling shiraz - either a 1986 or a 1990 I think)

Currently the oldest wine in the cellar is a magnum(!) of 1971 Harveys Bristol cream
Oldest non-fortified is a 1974 Pio Cesare Barbera d'Alba (with a remarkably good colour when I bought it)

If we're doing oldest in the cellar too, my oldest bottles are:

1943 Ch Le Caillou Monbazillac
1945 Huet Haut lieu Moelleux
and several 1945 vins doux naturels
 
I was fortunate enough a few years ago to attend a rather lovely relaxed Sunday lunch with a few members of this parish and if I recall correctly the generosity of Mr Oldfield was in full flow, the highlight be a 1952 Chateau Margaux that he had picked up as a bit of a bargain but thought could be shot - it wasn't. A truly mesmerising experience that I can still vividly recall today, all smokey brambles and lovely aged fruit. Followed by a other tasty 1961 Calon Segur - happy days of wining, dining and socialising
 
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